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Facebook’s bid to rule the web as it goes social

Facebook set out its stall to unseat Google and be at the heart of the web experience as it becomes more social.

The world’s largest social network unveiled a series of products at its developer conference F8 aimed at helping the company achieve that goal.

These tools will make it easier for users to take their friends with them as they browse the web.

“We are building toward a web where the default is social,” said Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder.

“If you look back a few years ago and even as recently as today, in most cases the web isn’t designed to use your friends. They don’t assume you have a real identity but we are seeing that seep in more and more.

Adobe abandons iPhone code tools

Adobe is to stop making software tools that allow Apple’s iPhone and iPad to use its popular Flash technology.

The decision reverses an earlier pledge in which it said it would help get Flash working on the gadgets.

Flash is very widely used on the web and many sites use it to power animations, media players and other multimedia elements.

Despite this, Apple’s products do not support Flash and it has made public statements criticising the technology.

IMF chief Strauss-Kahn tries to ease Greece fears

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, says the Greek people should not fear the IMF.

He was responding to a Greek journalist who said Greeks are demonising the IMF and fear the country’s economic crisis will be worse with its involvement.

He replied that the IMF was there to help Greece, but deflected questions about negotiations with its government.

Ministers deny torture collusion

Two cabinet ministers have strongly denied allegations of collusion in the abuse of terrorist suspects overseas.

But Foreign Secretary David Miliband and Home Secretary Alan Johnson said it was impossible to remove all risk when using intelligence obtained overseas.

This came as a committee of MPs urged a probe into the transfer of terror suspects through UK territories.

Last week a committee of MPs and peers called for an independent inquiry into claims of UK complicity in torture.

Detained Nigeria sect leader dies

The leader of an Islamic sect blamed for days of deadly violence in Nigeria has been killed in police custody, police officials have said.

Officials said Mohammed Yusuf was shot while trying to escape. They had announced his capture hours earlier.

Mr Yusuf led Boko Haram, which wants to overthrow the government and impose a strict version of Islamic law.

Hundreds of people have died in five days of clashes between his followers and security forces.

Mr Yusuf was held and later shot in the north-eastern city of Maiduguri.

“Mohammed Yusuf was killed by security forces in a shootout while trying to escape,” the regional police assistant inspector-general, Moses Anegbode, told Nigerian television.

A spokesman for the state governor told the Associated Press news agency: “I saw his body at police headquarters. I believe he was shot while he was trying to escape.”

State television showed jubilant police celebrating round his body, AFP news agency reported.

Troops had stormed Boko Haram’s stronghold on Wednesday night, killing many of the militants and forcing others to flee.

Mr Yusuf was arrested earlier on Thursday, after reportedly being found hiding in a goat pen at his parents-in-law’s house.

BBC News website Africa editor Joseph Winter says Nigeria’s security forces have a terrible reputation for brutality and human rights groups accuse them of frequent extra-judicial killings.

BBC info

The One Show and Watchdog’s Anita Rani is to turn the spotlight on skin-lightening treatments in a one-off documentary for BBC1.

Make Me White [working title] will look at the increasing pressure among Britain’s Asian and Afro-Caribbean communities to be pale and will ex-amine the booming trade in legal and illegal skin-lightening products.

Rani will also look at the effectiveness and side-effects of the various treatments.

“Anita starts with her own mother’s obsession with light skin,” said the BBC. “She goes undercover to find illegal creams and exposes the use of harmful chemicals in legally available creams.”

The show is being produced in-house in Birmingham and was ordered by BBC1 controller Jay Hunt and Nick Shearman, Knowledge commissioning executive producer in Wales. TX is planned for a 10.35pm slot in the summer.

Jo Ball, who was recently appointed commissioning editor for BBC1 and BBC2 features, will oversee the project.